Docker echo environment variable

I think there´s a series of issues here.

when I

docker run -i -t ubuntu /bin/bash
echo $USER
set

I don´t see $USER set at all - whoami does report daemon though.

additionally, I have the suspicion (but have not looked at the code yet) that ENV vars in the Dockerfile are escaped, to avoid their use (many people assume that they can export host variables to the built container, but this is something that the docker guys would like to avoid)


Couldn't you set, in the Dockerfile, the ENV command to a default value, and then, when run-ning a container, use the -e, --env dictionary to override what would be interpreted by the:

ENTRYPOINT echo $SOMEENVVAR

form of ENTRYPOINT?


This is the expected behavior, as weird as it seems!

When ENTRYPOINT is a list (as in ENTRYPOINT ["echo", "$USER"]), it is used as-is, without further parsing or interpretation. So $USER remains $USER, because there is no shell involved in the process to replace it with the value of the USER environment variable.

Now, when ENTRYPOINT is a string (as in ENTRYPOINT echo $USER), what is actually executed is sh -c "echo $USER", and $USER is replaced with the value of the environment variable (as you would expect).

However, the environment variable USER is not set by default. It is set by the login process; and when you just run sh -c ... the login process is not involved.

Compare the environment when running docker run -t -i ubuntu bash and docker run -t -i ubuntu login -f root. In the former case, you will get a very basic environment; in the latter case, you will get the complete environment that you are used to (including USERvariable).

Tags:

Docker